MoscowMoscow, taken its name by the Moskva river, is thecapital city and the most populated federal subject of Russia. These are five things you may not know about Russia’s Moscow.In 1156 the first references to construction of the wall around the growing city of Moscow began to appear in Russian documents as did descriptions of the city being attacked by Mongols. Moscow became the first capital city in 1327 when it was named capital of the Vladimir-Suzdal. Later Moscow became known as the Grand Duchy. Yuri was temporarily appointed grand duke of Vladimir by the khan of the Empire of the Golden Horde. His younger brother, Ivan 1 (Ivan Kalita; 1328–41), was not only granted the title of grand duke (1328) but was given the right to collect Tatar tributes from neighboring principalities. The unification of the Great Russian lands had been completed under the princely dynasty. The muscovite rulers now bore the title grand duke of Moscow and of all Russia, and the history of the gran duchy of Moscow became that of Russia.

Second, through out much of the rest of its history, Moscow was attacked by rival empires and armies. In the 17th century a large part of the city was damaged during a citizen uprising; in 1771 much of the Moscow’s population died due to the plague. Shortly after in 1812, Moscow’s citizen, Muscovites, burned the city during Napoleon’s invasion.

Thirdly after the Russian Revolution in 1917, Moscow became the capital of what would eventually become the Soviet Union in 1918 during World War II. However, a large portion of the city suffered damage from bombings. Following WWII, Moscow grew but instability continued in the city during the fall of the Soviet Union. Since then though, Moscow has become more stable and is a growing economic and political center of Russia. Today, Moscow is a highly organized city located on the banks of the Moskva River. It has 49 bridges crossing the river and a road system that radiates in rings out from...

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...Though the AmericanRevolution may have been fought on the context of greater equality and rights, the rights of several groups of American colonists were compromised by the rest in their fight for independence, including women, slaves, British Loyalists and the lower-class of the society.
WOMEN
Most colonists who led the revolution, including New Englander John Adams, believed that most women lacked the necessary intellect or emotional make-up to deal with complex political issues, and were not worthy enough to be considered citizens of the new country of America.
Though many women such as Mary Wollstonecraft and John Adam’s wife Abigail Adams considered the Revolution to be the perfect opportunity for freedom and equal rights for American women, their calls for equality for women were ignored. Abigail implored Adams in her letter dated March 31st 1776 to “Remember the Ladies, and be more generous and favourable to them than your ancestors,” as the founding fathers debated forming a new nation and prepared to draft a code of laws. Despite this, the founding fathers failed to make codifying women’s rights a priority as the Declaration of Independence in 1776 states ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness’ thus excluding...

..."No taxation without represntation."It means a government does not have the right to tax a group of people without them being represented in the government.That's what the colonists said when the british kept on taxing them unfairly.Some these taxes were the Stamp Act,and Tea Act.The stamp act was put in place in order to pay for the british soldiers being there.The tea act was also put in place to bail out the East India Tea Company,but ended up taxing the colonists.These are some of things that led to the AmericanRevolution.
Though the colonists disliked all of these laws they took particular offense to the 1763 Stamp Act.This required certain goods to have an offical stamp to show that the customer had to pay a tax.Many of these items were paper goods,such as legal documents and newspapers even playing cards,Colonists were really mad because the stamp act was passed in order to pay for the british soldiers being there.Then they started boycotting british business.One loyalists that was living there John Hughes he liked the stamp act and was appaled by the way the colonists were acting by saying "The colonists have been insulting his majesty,saying that the stamp act was a unconstitutional and opressive."
On March 5, 1770, Private Hugh White was on guard in front of the Customs House on King Street in Boston. A crowd of people had gathered and began harassing the soldier by saying "Come on you rascals ,you...

...hard and make money to succeed in their lives in spite of the British regulations and restraints. Britain was not even providing incentives for its own people to work hard and succeed as individuals – but only to promote the national interest. Even British people who worked hard would never see the individual rewards that the colonists were experiencing. (9/8).
The life of Benjamin Franklin personifies the dreams that the American colonists were able to achieve. He was born in Boston in the early 1700’s and had working-class roots. His first job was in his brother’s print shop. Eventually he became a wealthy man, publishing the famous and popular Poor Richards’ Almanac. Franklin was credited for discovering electricity and creating many useful inventions, like the bi-focal reading glasses and the lightning rod on tall buildings. He became powerful and very influential in Philadelphia and Washington, and is one of the founding fathers of the United States of America. Today his image can be found on the one hundred dollar bill. He is an American colonist success story and a hero of the nation....

...Ques -Explain how and why slavery developed in the American colonies. Why couldn’t colonists use indentured servants as they had in the past?
Ans -The study of labor in the United States has a tendency to lean towards a myopic analysis of the battle between corporations and unions. Working-class organization struggling against industrial titans understandably dominates any modern labor discussion, but the sources of these conflicts in the US are older than the nation itself. The labor system in Colonial America established the pattern of labor exploitation witnessed and discussed continually throughout US history.
Before the formation of the United States, the European colonies in the Americas had an insatiable demand for cheap, exploitable labor. Despite myths to the contrary, the land was not untamed nor virginal. Native Americans were seen as the ideal choice for wealthy Europeans seeking cheap labor, however many could not survive contact with diseases carried over the Atlantic by the colonialists. Local labor was out of the question. The next option was to bring over workers from England, Ireland, Germany, and other European countries, where a glut of low-skill workers had resulted in a growing impoverished class.
For many early European immigrants, life in the American colonies was sold as a fresh start. Pamphlets were distributed to all classes of life selling the bountiful riches of the colonies in an...

...Was the AmericanRevolution really a revolution?
A revolution, as defined by the Oxford English dictionary, is the overthrow of an established government or social order by those previously subject to it. Although, the colonists did overthrow the British monarch, there was not enough change in American society for it to be a revolution. After the colonists won the war with Britain, they created their own form of government. A foundation and basis for the newly formed government was the Articles of Confederation, which was largely influence from the British government. These articles temporarily provided the Americans with law and order, before they wrote the Constitution. The AmericanRevolution caused change politically, in the government, and socially, particularly toward women and slaves, but did not have significantly change America.
The Declaration of Independence was an important influence on the Americans when they were planning a new government. Thomas Jefferson’s personal motto was “Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God” (Boorstin 106). This thought can be seen when Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence that “when a long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such...

...the years from 1600 to 1783 the thirteen colonies in North America were introduced to slavery and underwent the American Revolutionary War. Colonization of the New World by Europeans during the seventeenth century resulted in a great expansion of slavery, which later became the most common form of labor in the colonies. According to Peter Kolchin, modern Western slavery was a product of European expansion and was predominantly a system of labor. Even with the introduction of slavery to the New World, life still wasn’t as smooth as we may presume. Although the early American colonists found it perfectly fine to enslave an entire race of people, they found themselves being controlled in every facet of life by the British Empire. After the French and Indian War in 1765, the American Colonists began to notice that ironically enough they were, in some form, enslaved by Great Britain. From being unrightfully taxed, i.e. The Stamp Act, to being denied entry into the military ranks of Britain, the American colonists soon figured out that they were not as free as they once thought. Boycotts, protests, and riots, including events such as The Boston Tea Party and The Boston Massacre painted the landscape of rebellion in the early colonies which led to the era in American History known as The AmericanRevolution. The institution of slavery and the ideology of the American...

...There are different schools of thoughts to explain why the revolution started, but out of all the schools I agree the most with the Imperial School. The Imperial School is the result of the clash of two empires, the British and the Americans, with different viewpoints. The British wanted to have control over the Americans while the Americans wanted to be independent from the British, a free nation. This clash in viewpoints resulted inrevolution which later results in America’s independence and transformation in society.
Americans were guided by the British having the same beliefs and doing what they were told. Shortly, this would all change when the government started to make acts. These acts were passed due to the debt (140 million pounds) of the Seven Years’ War. In Britain taxes were common and were even getting raised but, for Americans it was unfamiliar to have such a thing as taxes to help the government economically. It all started out with the Sugar Act in 1764, it increased the duty on sugar being imported from the West Indies. The colonist didn’t approve of this act and started to protest and as a result the tax started to lower, later it died out. Protest didn’t stop just there but continued once the Quartering Act came out in 1765. This made colonist provide food to British troops. While making this new act they started to enforce a new tax called the stamp...

...The Patriot Vs. The AmericanRevolution
As you watch the Patriot you see many of the battles fought during the Americanrevolution. You also see the uniforms they wore to battle, and the guns they used and
how they were used. But what you didn't see was the fact that the movie doesn't relate to
the AmericanRevolution, in ways that I'm going to explain in the next paragraphs. It was
different because of the weapons they used, the way the slaves were being treated in the
movie compared to in the actual time, the way the battles were fought and where they
were, and the transportation they used.
In the movie there were scene's in which they were in a battle fighting and the
canon ball would come out of the canon and travel through the air at a fast speed hit the
ground a blow up. The canon balls did not blow up back then, they simply hit the ground
and took out whatever was in the way, because they were made from cast-iron.(The
history place.www.historyplace.com) And it also showed them having good accuracy, the
cannons only had one purpose taking out as many people as possible in one place, they
did not focus on accuracy when they made the cannon. That is why they had multiple
cannons set up behind the infantry men. The guns the used in the movie resembled, the
ones they used in the AmericanRevolution, but oviously they were replica's. They
showed...